Abstract
Electrophysiologic studies were performed in 83 consecutive patients with spontaneous nonsustained ventricular tachycardia (VT). VT was inducible in 52 patients (nonsustained VT only in 37 patients, nonsustained and sustained VT in 13 and sustained VT only in 2). During a follow-up of 3 to 111 months (mean 33), 10 patients died suddenly, 5 with coronary artery disease (CAD) and 5 with dilated cardiomyopathy. All patients with sudden death had an ejection fraction ≤0.40. Sudden death occurred in 4 of 15 patients with inducible sustained VT, 2 of 37 patients with only nonsustained VT and 4 of 31 patients without inducible VT. One patient with dilated cardiomyopathy and VT inducible only by isoproterenol died suddenly. Three of 5 patients with CAD who had sudden death had had inducible sustained VT, but 3 of 5 patients with cardiomyopathy who had sudden death had no inducible VT. Multivariate analysis revealed that patients with inducible sustained VT or an ejection fraction ≤0.40 had a 3-fold increased risk of sudden death, and patients with both factors had a 7-fold increased risk of sudden death. This study demonstrates that patients with nonsustained VT with an ejection fraction > 0.40 have an uncomplicated course; however, noninducibility does not predict such a course, particularly in patients with cardiomyopathy. The most powerful predictor of risk for sudden cardiac death is a left ventricular ejection fraction ⪯0.40, but the presence of inducible sustained VT is an independent risk factor for sudden death.
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